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Expert Yogi
Posts: 8442
| I am not the person who does the hiring (actually we hire as a group - poor applicants have to sit with all ten of us in the room ) but we do get a look at the papers before a person comes in for an interview and the boss makes the final decsision. If it were teaching yoga I would be peering over your resume looking at where you trained, who with, who mentored your teacher training and stuff like that. I would want to see how you taught - biggest of all. |
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Expert Yogi
Posts: 1738
Location: right where I'm supposed to be | Well, I want my cover letter to be professional. My resume outlines my fitness career for the past 22 years.
I also list in bulleted format, education, certifications, acheivements, community work, guest lectures, modeling work and the sort. I had positive feedback so far.
I have not been asked to submit a bio which I guess is good for me because I wouldn't know what to say.
As a matter of fact, I want to apply to be the cover model for a local fitness magazine. You have to send professional studios photographs and a bio. I've been procrastinating because I don't know what to say in the bio. They want it short and sweet. Maybe you guys could give me some hints. I would appreciate it tremendously.
Mishy |
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| mishoga - 2006-02-20 9:44 AM
They want it short and sweet. Maybe you guys could give me some hints. I would appreciate it tremendously.
Tell the truth. Actually, you'd have to post something for us to start from, at the moment, I don't think we know anything about your history. |
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Expert Yogi
Posts: 8442
| I think for that sort of thing they want a blurb to put with the photo. "Mish began practicing yoga in 198x to complement her fitness teachings. She studies primarily with xyz and feels yoga is beneficial for everyone." or words to that effect - I think. |
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| mishy:
generally, short and sweet in this instance is something to this effect: mishy is a yoga teacher who has _ years experience in the fitness industry. |
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